(This is part one of two posts on Ushahidi as an organization, it sets up the historical context of how we think about who we are and how we think of success in our space, so that the next post makes more sense on what we're doing next.)
While Ushahidi maintains a startup mentality internally, we're 4 1/2 years old now, which is a long time in tech years. In an industry like ours, where nimbleness and speed are rewarded, this mentality needs to be maintained. Earlier this year we started asking ourselves a bunch of questions about the platform itself, included in that discussion was whether or not what we built 4 years ago was relevant today. In short, it is, as we continue to see about 1000 new deployments each month. When we look and see over 30,000 deployments in 156 countries, it seems like a strong signal for the platform.
It's not.
We sometimes talk about those numbers like they're the proof-point for success, but that's a mistake that we shouldn't get sucked into. You see, it's an easy thing to throw out big numbers to make yourself look and sound important. While we'd like to see everyone create a Crowdmap whenever they need to map something, the test of our platform's success isn't built into pure numbers alone. The test of Ushahidi's success is whether or not it's used when someone needs to map something with input from the crowd quickly and easily. The test is whether people's lives are positively changed by having access to Ushahidi.
I remember in early 2009, when we were a year old and starting to talk to funders for larger funding to scale the organization, we were asked, "Is your goal to have 10,000 maps with 10 reports, or 10 maps with 10,000 reports." A fantastic question that led to much debate within the founding team. It's a deep question that carries a lot of weight in how you build an organization, a platform and develop a strategy to address your core mission.
- [Depth] Is it more important to build a tool that's used in a couple key deployments (crisis, elections) and has massive engagement?
- [Reach] Is it more important to build a tool that democratizes the ability for anyone in the world to easily map and crowdsource information (and let a thousand burger maps proliferate)?